Abide in Me, and I in You--John 15:4
When a new graft is placed in a vine and it abides there, there is a twofold
process that takes place. The first is in the wood. The graft shoots its little
roots and fibers down into the stem, and the stem grows up into the graft, and
what has been called the structural union is effected. The graft abides and
becomes one with the vine, and even though the vine were to die, would still be
one wood with it. Then there is the second process, in which the sap of the vine
enters the new structure, and uses it as a passage through which sap can flow up
to show itself in young shoots and leaves and fruit. Here is the vital union.
Into the graft which abides in the stock, the stock enters with sap to abide in
it.
When our Lord says: "Abide in me, and I in you," He points to something
analogous to this. "Abide in me": that refers more to that which we have to do.
We have to trust and obey, to detach ourselves from all else, to reach out after
Him and cling to Him, to sink ourselves into Him. As we do this, through the
grace He gives, a character is formed, and a heart prepared for the fuller
experience: "I in you," God strengthens us with might by the Spirit in the inner
man, and Christ dwells in the heart by faith.
Many believers pray and long very earnestly for the filling of the Spirit and
the indwelling of Christ, and wonder that they do not make more progress. The
reason is often this, the "I in you" cannot come because the "abide in me" is
not maintained. "There is one body and one spirit"; before the Spirit can fill,
there must be a body prepared. The graft must have grown into the stem, and be
abiding in it before the sap can flow through to bring forth fruit. It is as in
lowly obedience we follow Christ, even in external things, denying ourselves,
forsaking the world, and even in the body seeking to be conformable to Him, as
we thus seek to abide in Him, that we shall be able to receive and enjoy the "I
in you." The work enjoined on us: "Abide in me," will prepare us for the
work undertaken by Him: "I in you."
In--The two parts of the injunction have their unity in that central
deep-meaning word "in." There is no deeper word in Scripture. God is in all. God
dwells in Christ. Christ lives in God. We are in Christ. Christ is in us: our
life taken up into His; His life received into ours; in a divine reality that
words cannot express, we are in Him and He in us. And the words, "Abide in me
and I in you," just tell us to believe it, this divine mystery, and to count
upon our God the Husbandman, and Christ the Vine, to make it divinely true. No
thinking or teaching or praying can grasp it; it is a divine mystery of love. As
little as we can effect the union can we understand it. Let us just look upon
this infinite, divine, omnipotent Vine loving us, holding us, working in us. Let
us in the faith of His working abide and rest in Him, ever turning heart and
hope to Him alone. And let us count upon Him to fulfill in us the mystery: "Ye
in me, and I in you."
Blessed Lord, Thou dost bid me abide in Thee. How can I, Lord, except Thou show
Thyself to me, waiting to receive and welcome and keep me? I pray Thee show me
how Thou as Vine undertaketh to do all. To be occupied with Thee is to abide in
Thee. Here I am, Lord, a branch, cleansed and abiding--resting in Thee, and
awaiting the inflow of Thy life and grace.
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The True Vine by Andrew Murray - Public Domain [Copy Freely]